
An
exchange-traded fund (ETF) is a basket of securities created to track as
closely as possible a particular market index, such as the Standard &
Poor’s 500 Index or the Dow Jones Industrial Average. They’re similar
to mutual funds in that they represent investments in the same types of
securities, but they generally have lower fees and can be bought and
sold with more pricing immediacy than mutual funds. They also have some
clear tax advantages.
Since
their launch in the early 1990s on the American Stock Exchange, there
are now hundreds of ETFs available for investors to buy. As the market
has struggled its way back since 2000, investors have embraced ETFs as a
more efficient alternative to a mutual fund invested in the same
securities. A financial planner can tell you whether ETFs are right for
your portfolio, but here are some details to know beforehand:
How
are ETFs created?
An ETF is created by large
institutional investors who buy stocks aligning with the shares in a
particular index, and then they exchange those shares – in baskets as
large as 50,000 shares – for shares in the ETF. The redemption process
works the same way in reverse -- the institutional investors exchange
shares of the ETF for baskets of the underlying stocks.
Are
all ETFs based on indexes?
Yes. Indexes, like the S&P
500 or the Hang Seng Index (the primary stock index of the Hong Kong
Stock Exchange), are a listing of stocks reflecting the activity of a
particular investment sector on a stock exchange. One of the first
popular ETFs had an unusual nickname – Spiders – a play on its actual
name, SPDR, short for Standard and Poor’s Depositary Receipts. Newer
ETFs track less well-known indexes, even indexes of bonds, and some ETFs
are tracking very dynamic indexes that almost act like actively managed
funds.
How
are ETFs traded?
Unlike mutual funds, which have their prices set at the end of the
trading day, ETFs are priced and traded every moment of the trading
day. That’s generally more meaningful to institutional investors who
buy and sell constantly than long-term investors who buy and hold. Furthermore,
unlike mutual funds, ETFs can be bought on margin or sold short.
Why
might ETFs be more tax-efficient?
Generally, ETFs generate fewer capital gains due to the unique creation
and redemption process as well as the usually lower turnover of
securities that comprise their underlying portfolios. Financial
planners note that investors can better control the timing of the tax
treatment of ETFs relative to mutual funds. Most importantly -- by
holding an ETF for at least one year and a day, capital gains will be
treated as long-term capital gains, which are currently taxed at a
federal rate of 15 percent (5 percent for low tax bracket investors).
Are
there other advantages?
Unlike traditional mutual funds, which must disclose their holdings
quarterly, ETF holdings are fully transparent, and investors know what
holdings are in the ETF at any given time. Each ETF also has a NAV
tracking symbol for even more precise analysis. This helps keep ETFs
trading within pennies of their intraday NAV.
What
about fees?
Shares of index-based ETFs may have even lower annual expenses than
similar index mutual funds, which, in turn, tend to be lower than those
of actively managed mutual funds. ETFs must, however, be bought and
sold through brokers, and those trades do involve transaction costs.
ETFs may prove to be more expensive than mutual funds to investors who
add money each month to their portfolio.
What’s
the downside? Unlike
regular mutual funds, ETFs do not necessarily trade at the net asset
values of their underlying holdings. Instead, the market price of an
ETF is determined by supply and demand for the ETF shares alone.
Usually, the ETF value closely mirrors the value of the underlying
shares, but there’s always a chance for ETFs to trade at prices above or
below the value of their underlying portfolios. Also, since so many new
ETFs are hitting the market, investors should be aware of the maturity
of the particular ETF they are considering.
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April 2007 — This column is produced by the Financial Planning Association, the
membership organization for the financial planning community.